Original Menu, Original Decor

Naturally, Dog Haus’ founders want the appearance of their restaurants to reflect the creativity of their menu. When they first started looking through furniture catalogs, though, they didn’t find what they were looking for. “[We saw that] it’s all the same . . . Here’s a four-top, here’s a base,” recalls Riaz. “We didn’t want to do that. Our food isn’t like that, and the dining experience isn’t just about the food. So, how do we mimic the creativity of our food and do that with our furniture and our design?”

The answer to that question was found in the metal-fabrication and powder-coating shop that Quasim still oversees (though he no longer runs its day-to-day operations). The team used the equipment and expertise they essentially had in-house to build Dog Haus’ furniture.

They settled on a look that is at once relaxed, hip and industrial. The first round of furniture featured four- and six-foot picnic tables with flat-black, powder-coated metal frames resting on red casters, with stained wood slats for the seats and table tops, as well as bar-height communal tables that used the same materials and seated eight to 10 people.

When the chain began franchising in 2013, the team kept this approach to decor, but changed the particulars. Once again relying on their in-house fabrication expertise, they designed picnic tables made out of 3/8-inch hot-rolled steel. For the tops, they went with stained butcher blocks, a choice that makes sense on multiple levels.

“We do fresh ground meat for our burgers, hot dogs and sausages. We wanted to have some of that feeling in the restaurant by having that butcher block on top,” Riaz says. “It also adds a lot of warmth, because when you’re dealing with rolled steel, you get kind of a cold feeling.”

Front-of-the-House Kitchen

That cold feeling that can come from steel furniture and concrete floors is further offset by the activity of Dog Haus’ front-of-the-house kitchen. The cookline sits along the back wall, also home to a soft-serve ice cream machine and beer taps. The cookline itself starts with a chargrill, where kitchen staffers cook the sausages and fire-grill peppers for various house-made sauces.

Dog Haus’ front of the house features a deli case where customers can see the chain’s meats in their rawest form. The chain put in the case when it began franchising and saw an immediate increase in its sausage sales.Next to the chargrill sits a 48-inch flattop that staff use to cook the hot dogs and burgers, caramelize onions, and toast the buttered Hawaiian rolls, which are stored on a rack nearby. Refrigerated drawers sit beneath the flattop, where proteins are stored for easy access.

Initially, Riaz notes, Dog Haus considered going with a steam-heated flattop, but they found hamburgers cooked on such units didn’t develop the crisp “burger bark” they were after. The chain selected a gas-fired flattop instead.

Next to the flattop is a four-burner range with a conventional oven below. On the range, kitchen staffers fry eggs and make chili. During peak volume times, they’ll also keep a pot of hot water on the stove, which they use to warm hot dogs before moving them to the grill for finishing. Staff primarily use the oven to cook bacon throughout the day. This unit, notes Riaz, was originally a convection oven, but the airflow splattered grease throughout the cooking chamber, requiring frequent oven cleanings and leading to almost-as-frequent breakdowns.

After the oven/range come two fryers used for tater tots, French fries and even bacon-wrapped hot dogs. The chain also uses the fryers to blanch the French fries before cooking them. Next to the fryers is a landing station, where fries are seasoned and held, followed by a reach-in refrigerator that stores tater tots, racks of blanched French fries and other ingredients. The cookline then ends with a small hot-holding table used for storing batches of chili, grilled onions and other foods.

The final production/finishing line faces the customer and starts with a point-of-sale system. Next comes one of the upgrades the chain has made to its design since it began franchising, and arguably the centerpiece of the restaurant: a Dog Haus-branded refrigerated deli case where uncooked hot dogs, burgers and sausages are stored. The case sits directly opposite the flattop, allowing cooks to easily restock the undercounter refrigerator with proteins throughout the day.

What’s more, each of the meats is labeled, allowing people to connect what they see with what’s on the menu. “People walk in, and they stare at [the case],” says Riaz. “It’s really cool to see your food in its rawest form. When we put that in, our sausage sales went up.”

Following the deli case is a hot table with wells, where hot toppings like chili, caramelized onions and roasted peppers are held. Kitchen staffers working this station receive the cooked and bunned burgers, dogs and sausages and add the appropriate toppings.

After the hot table, Dog Haus employs a pizza table with cold wells for holding cold toppings like cheese and tomato. The chain, notes Riaz, rejected a standard sandwich prep table in favor of the pizza table simply for the extra workspace it would provide. After cold toppings are added, finished orders are placed on a countertop, where table runners grab them to deliver to waiting customers.

Dog Haus features a fairly basic back of the house, including a few prep tables, various smallwares and refrigeration. Where the space allows it, the chain prefers to use walk-in refrigerators over reach-ins, Riaz says, because they don’t require as much time to manage storage space. Stores that can sell beer are also designed with walk-in keg coolers.

Finally Franchising

When the first Dog Haus opened its doors in October 2010, it found near immediate success. Riaz, Vener and Giragossian opened up a second store one year later and just a mile and a half away — this one with a full bar and 14 craft beers on tap. Six months after that, they opened up a third location, also nearby.

During this time, customers would regularly ask if the concept was franchising. But the answer they got was always no. “We had always thought of franchising as a dirty word. We didn’t want to be one of the big chains. You want to have that authenticity,” says Riaz.

But enough time passed and enough inquires came in that the partners decided to explore the process. After discussing the ins and outs with a franchise consultant one day, they were all sold. Giragossian, Riaz and Vener spent the next year getting their franchise disclosure statement written and putting their systems and processes on paper.

During this period, their lack of experience in the franchise world was less of a problem than one might think, Riaz states. Having opened a trio of stores in 18 months made the work of establishing a system much simpler. “The fact that we had to make sure the food was consistent, that the experience was the same — we’d already done that without knowing we were going the franchise route. We just had to take everything we’d already done to make it replicable for somebody else.”

The chain officially began selling franchises in July of 2012 and inked its first franchise agreement in August. Dog Haus now has eight locations. The chain was on track to open three more franchised locations by the end of 2014, and has agreements for another 70 stores in Arizona, California, Colorado and Utah; and the chain expects a total of 25 of these units to open their doors in 2015.

To sum up, Dog Haus anticipates 500 percent growth in the next year. Additional states, including Texas and Oregon, are in Dog Haus’ expansion plans as well.

All this for a chain that specializes in the lowly hot dog.

Thanks to Dog Haus, that hot dog may not be lowly for too much longer.